DOD needs a change in acquisition culture
The Pentagon needs a modern, agile acquisition process that can get technology into the field faster — and industry should take the lead.
A.J. Clark is the President of Thermopylae Sciences and Technology.
The basic military rifle, the M16, and its derivatives — including the M4 carbine that today’s infantry troops use — date back to 1963 and the jungles of Vietnam. Development began in 1949.
USS Nimitz, the Navy’s first-of-its-class carrier, was commissioned in 1975. The next carrier, the Gerald R. Ford, will join the fleet in 2016 after construction began in 2005. The F-15E, the Air Force’s workhorse in Iraq and Afghanistan, goes back to 1984. The development contract for the F-35 was signed in 1996, and the first scheduled deployment will be in 2018.
My point is this: An acquisition process designed for large and unique weapon systems is becoming harder and harder to apply to technologies in the Information Age. The challenges that the Pentagon and Congress face with defense IT acquisition will continue to grow if the system for buying airplanes, ships and rifles is applied.
There is a need for a cultural shift in government procurement and in the defense industry that can allow an informed series of vendors to anticipate needs and shorten the acquisition cycle so the Defense Department doesn’t buy mobile and Web applications the way it builds ships and airplanes.
The current acquisition process — see a problem, craft what the required solution looks like, compete the solution, buy the solution, build the solution — is so cumbersome that it has reversed development from government stimulation to business fomentation. Where once DOD’s need drove IT development, which then spun off to commercial use, now we in the software industry build our products as commercial technology.
It’s the reason research and development money from Amazon, Samsung, Google and others in the IT world dwarfs that of U.S. defense, and it’s the reason commercial capability drives solutions for government need. Is it any wonder that, when the CIA went shopping for cloud computing capability for the intelligence community, it turned to Amazon with a $600 million, 10-year contract?
An acquisition process designed for large and unique weapon systems is becoming harder and harder to apply to technologies in the Information Age.
We in industry want to align ourselves with a new, modern, agile acquisition process to build things at our own expense so that when government sees technology it can use, it can buy that technology quickly and get it to the field, where it can save lives.
That approach allows smaller companies with specialized IT capabilities to solve DOD problems now. Warfighters see capabilities that are available commercially and wonder why those capabilities are not adapted to military use in the field, where they can bridge existing capability gaps.
The need for a culture change in defense acquisition was addressed at length in the National Defense Industrial Association’s “Pathway to Transformation” report. “NDIA does not believe there is a ‘one size fits all’ approach that will uniformly deliver the best acquisition outcomes,” the report states. “Different kinds of acquisition programs require different kinds of tools, authorities and oversight to ensure integrity in the process.”
The report also said: “Culture eats strategy for lunch.”
That’s only one of the reasons to applaud the confirmation of Ashton Carter as secretary of Defense. Carter led a march toward acquisition reform as undersecretary of Defense for acquisition, technology and logistics in 2010, and his successor in that post, Frank Kendall, has continued that march with his legislative proposals to streamline the complex acquisition process.
It’s a blueprint for a culture change, one that both DOD and the defense industry can get behind to reward vision, accountability and reason.
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